Gentile da Fabriano (c. 1370 – 1427) was an
Italian painter known for his participation in the
International Gothic painter style. He worked in various places in central Italy, mostly in Tuscany. His best-known works are his Adoration of the Magi from the Strozzi Altarpiece, (1423) and the Flight into Egypt.

Gentile was born in or near
Fabriano, in the
Marche. His mother died some time before 1380, and his father, Niccolò di Giovanni Massi, retired to a monastery in the same year, where he died in 1385. Little is known of his formation: one of his first known works, a
Madonna with Child (c. 1395–1400, now in Berlin) shows the influence of the northern Italian late-Gothic painting.

Gentile is known to have died before 14 October 1427. He is commonly said to have been buried in the church now called S. Francesca Romana in Florence, but his tomb vanished; there is evidence, however, that he may be buried in the church of
Santa Maria in Trastevere, in Rome, the place of his death.

He left no works in the
Marche, except possibly a Madonna and Child (of uncertain attribution) in the
Duomo at
Sant'Angelo in Vado, near Urbino. He also left one painting in Venice.